Learning outcomes

The main objective of the course is to introduce the students to the modern models of political economics (i.e., economic models of the formation of policies), both from theoretical and empirical standpoint.

Content

The first part of the course covers theoretical models of policy formation in democratic societies and empirical tests of competing theories. The second part covers the applications of these models to explain existing variations in government size, lobbying motives, constitution designs, quality of politicians, etc.

Table of contents

We start with a general Introduction on collective choice rules (Arrow and Gibbard-Sattertwaite impossibility theorems and median voter theorem).

We then cover models of electoral competition under various alternative assumptions (opportunistic vs partisan politicians, general-interest vs special-interest policies, deterministic vs probabilistic voting, pre-election vs post-election politics)

We then investigate models of rent extraction and agency.

We cover some models about legislative bargaining and lobbying.

Finally, we study two papers on the quality of politicians and the optimal design of constitutions.

Exercices

None

Assessment method

The evaluation is "continuous": students receive part of their grade for their group assignment and the other part of their grade from a final closed-book exam.

Sources, references and any support material

T. Persson and G. Tabellini, Political Economics: Explaining Economic Policy, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2000. The list of empirical papers will be distributed during the 1st lecture.

Language of instruction

French